Pat Quinn has a tough act to follow

Before Rod Blagojevich came along, Pat Quinn was often ridiculed as a
camera-hungry huckster with lots of ideas and little follow-through.

But after six years of Blagojevich’s bomb-throwing, empty promises, flat-out lies, needless political wars and
miserable failures, finally topped off with a shocking display of corruption
and self-immolation, our new Gov. Quinn looks like a statesman by comparison.

Many of us are so shell-shocked since Blagojevich’s arrest and so thoroughly sick of seeing that awful man on our TV screens 24/7
that Quinn suddenly feels like a rush of fresh air.

It wasn’t all that long ago that Quinn was infamous for using every PR gimmick in the
book to attract television cameras. In the process, he alienated pretty much
the entire political establishment. But last week, after he was sworn in as our
41st governor, Quinn said that Illinois needed “humble” leadership and promised to work closely with everyone in government to move the
state forward.

As Quinn has said, we do, indeed, need far more cooperation at the top levels of
government. We need a healthy respect for the process and the principle of
separation of powers. We need a more quiet, humble leadership. We need a far
more rational, inclusive and open-minded approach to budgeting and
policymaking.

I have gained quite a lot of respect for Quinn in the past few years. It started
when I learned that he was attending the funerals and wakes of Illinois
soldiers who were killed in our two foreign wars. He never tipped off the media
about what he was doing. He didn’t speak at the events unless asked. He didn’t glad-hand the bereaved. Quinn just slipped into the somber ceremonies
unannounced, paid his respects and left when it was over. And he always asked
permission before attending. If the families didn’t want him there, he didn’t go.

Now, that’s a class act, I thought at the time. Still do, in fact.

But some of the “old” Pat Quinn reemerged last year while he was still lieutenant governor during an
intense legislative battle over a constitutional amendment for recalling
elected officials.

The recall bill passed the House, but the Senate’s sponsor had been quoted as saying that the proposal was “stupid.”

Quinn shot back that “certain members” of the Senate were preparing a “phony baloney... sneak attack” on the recall proposal, then spent days holding press conferences throughout
the state and meeting with newspaper editorial boards.

The reaction was not pretty. The Senate sponsor, Donne Trotter, was so
infuriated by Quinn’s publicity tour that he refused to shake Quinn’s hand at a subsequent committee hearing. Trotter overreacted, of course, but
Quinn’s attempt to use blunt force to push the proposal through the Senate failed, and
did severe damage to his relationships with several members of that chamber.

Still, Quinn didn’t call out senators by name, and did his very best to maintain a calm demeanor
while the Senate committee members tore into him with relish, and even agreed
to support a retaliatory proposal which would have terminated the lieutenant
governor’s service if the governor was ever recalled.

So, I suppose that’s progress.

He now has a much larger bully pulpit as governor, however. Legislators are
awful tired of being bossed around and publicly humiliated by Rod Blagojevich
over the past six years, so Quinn has a delicate task ahead.

One of his first orders of business, he has said, is passing new laws to prevent
future Blagojevich-style disasters. Only when the public is satisfied that the
state government’s ethics are back on track will they be willing to accept sacrifices in the face
of the government’s fiscal meltdown.

But convincing those same legislators who were so hostile to him last year to go
along with yet another push for recall and some even broader reforms will
require a deft touch. He can’t show weakness, but he must avoid bluster. Another needless showdown could be
disastrous, considering the gargantuan task ahead of fixing the almost
hopelessly broken state budget and passing an expensive job creation bill, all
while avoiding further damage to the state’s tanking economy.

No governor in Illinois history — perhaps even American history — has had to face such widespread disaster and hunger for change on such short
notice as Pat Quinn.